Some say we have an addiction to oil. I say we have much more than an addiction. We are entirely reliant upon it. Oil will run out someday. And when it does we will have no cars, transportation, plastic, oil-based paint, petroleum, asphalt, some kinds of wax, and 3% of the nations electricity (which is actually a lot). However, wind, water movement, geothermal, and solar energy will not run out, making them excellent alternatives to oil.
Now it is true that in the past few years considerable steps forward have been made in the domestic clean energy effort. However, considerable is not momentous. We need to look at the facts and not believe everything we hear or read. In the 1970s an embargo against the U.S., as well as other countries that supported Israel, was enacted by multiple oil producing countries in the middle east. This embargo devastated the U.S. and caused the government to start releasing energy conservation ads. At the time most sources of renewable energy were either out of reach or not thought of. During this shortage of fuel, people started driving smaller, and more fuel efficient cars. However, after the embargo was ended people began to revert to their old, wasteful selves. We could learn a few lessons from this crisis. To begin with, we can not place a significant amount of our energy dependence in oil, whether foreign or domestic. The United states is currently the worlds biggest consumer of oil. Also contrary to popular belief, the price of oil did not skyrocket in the last few months. It did rise but the spikes were caused by speculation that in the future it will rise. You see roughly two thirds of all energy used in transportation is based on petroleum. When the price of travel (which is considered a necessity) goes up, than the consumer has less money to spend in the every day world. Now that they have less to spend many businesses start to lose money, and when businesses start to lose money, their stock price goes down, devaluing the company. When all of those companies combined stocks plummet the stock market becomes a scary place. So if you think about it, oil could be blamed for the economic “Slump” we're in.
In a study published in Gallup Poll, March 2007, 53% of Americans thought the United States of America was likely to face an energy shortage within the next five years. We know the problems are there. We are just doing little about it. With this in mind, we must be more conservative and fuel efficient. It is time to stop pleasing the oil companies and start pleasing the people who comprise this incredible nation. This problem cannot be solved over night. We must wean ourselves slowly off the oil, and gradualy use our money (that our economy currently does not have due to a financial crisis) to fill in those gaps of open land with solar panels and wind turbines. It is a huge investment we must make but in the end are the results not worth it? We send billions of dollars overseas for oil each year draining the ocean that is our economy until only the fish are left to flop around and die. We must stop being so gluttonous in nature. We shouldn’t be the country where bigger is better and excess is excellent. We should be the country where efficient, is better. Many people believe that the government is to blame for all the trouble we are in, but this is not true. Although they are a large culprit, so are all of us normal folk. We are the ones actually allowing it to happen, if not causing it. We are not only the nation of excess, but we are than nation of laziness. We have the highest rate of obesity of any developed country in the world. We are the country where a quarter mile is too much to walk.
Another ill effect of our oil addiction is the cause it has on the world around us. We are releasing excess amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. Carbon dioxide is naturally occurring in the atmosphere in low percentages, and assists with the trapping of heat from the sun. Now that we have too much, the world is slowly heating. Ice bergs are melting causing a rise in sea level. A rise in sea level (as well as a rise in ocean temperature) is causing delicate ecosystems to falter or fail entirely. In addition to this, warmer ocean temperatures are causing new air flow patterns in the atmosphere, resulting in strange new weather patterns. Places that need rain are no longer getting it, and places that were getting rain are now getting too much.
In short, oil is the root of all our problems. The financial crisis, our wars, and animal extinction can all be related to it. So grab a fuel efficient car, move to a city at least thirty feet above sea level, and hold on. The transition from oil to alternative energy is likely to be a lengthy one.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Thursday, October 23, 2008
Did You Know: The Rise of the Rest
A while back in English class we watched a presentation known as "Shift Happens". It was about the growing world, growing needs, growing connections, and growing population. In his new blog Mr. Fisch shows us a newer version, Did You Know: The Rise of the Rest and Arabic Translation.
This presentation is based more on the Chinese people, as well as the rest of Asia. In side the presentation are arguments just as frightening as the original, if not scarier. It is difficult to try and imagine the environment we (and our kids) will grow up in. I myself am beginning to believe that we as a collective peoples need to slow down if we have any hope of surviving. We have too many pressing problems that need fixing, which we simply ignore in the hopes that they will go away.Well, they're not.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mxJZ6Jhnrk
This presentation is based more on the Chinese people, as well as the rest of Asia. In side the presentation are arguments just as frightening as the original, if not scarier. It is difficult to try and imagine the environment we (and our kids) will grow up in. I myself am beginning to believe that we as a collective peoples need to slow down if we have any hope of surviving. We have too many pressing problems that need fixing, which we simply ignore in the hopes that they will go away.Well, they're not.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mxJZ6Jhnrk
Friday, October 3, 2008
FREEDOM! At School?
In Mr fisch's latest article, Intellectual Freedom: Where Do You Stand?, he raises many valid questions that have no apparent answer. What are the limits where the school should stop filtering our Internet? Is our system a good one? At many other schools a large amount of sites are blocked automatically, and teachers can request a website to be added. Here at Arapahoe, some sites are fully blocked while others are blocked, but can be bypassed by a teacher's password. Nearly every site with games explicit graphics or any form of entertainment is blocked. We have it much better than most. I believe that our system works, just not very efficiently. I believe it would be much better if the students here at Arapahoe were able to unblock sites, but a log was kept of what sites we unblocked. That way we would have freedom, but would still be supervised and under control.
Monday, September 29, 2008
Mrs. Crosby's blog
My social studies teacher, Mrs. Crosby, has a blog entitled The Devil's Advocate. Its a great blog with interesting topics and frequent new posts. Recently Mr. Fisch discussed her blog on his blog, The Fischbowl. Mr. Fisch, during his explanation, touched upon a view of Mrs. Crosby's that is frequently exhibited in here class. She believes that a teacher should not give her opinion out because it may form unjustified prejudices within the students when it comes to discussing the topic later. What she does with her blog is different from most teachers, because she may post something that she disagrees with entirely just to provoke thought and argument. This is a fantastic idea. There are advantages to airing your opinion, but I personally believe a moderator in a debate should not even hint to their individual ideas regarding the subject at hand. If only all teachers could share this notion of mine.
Parodys, funny but sometimes realistic.
Have you ever missed an important debate and wanted to get the general gist of what happened? Believe it or not the way to do that according to my article, Politics, Palin and 'SNL', might be to watch MAD TV or Saturday Night Live (SNL). In Many of the parodies portraying actual events, the skit itself is almost a point by point run through with a few cups of drama thrown in. Although at times the skits can get a bit off topic, their main ideas are still fundamentally the same. I personally watch SNL on a frequent basis and have seen many parodies of interviews and debates as demonstrated with the videos at the bottom. Both videos ar hilarious and i recommend you watch them both.
In This Video Amy Pohler and Tina Fey make fun of a debate between Sarah Palin and Katie Couric. Some of the lines in this skit were taken directly from the actual conversation.
This is a parody of the first presidential candidate debate between John McCain and Barrak Obama. Although the McCain impression is not that accurate in this video, the Barrak impression raises some of his actual points from the real debate.
In This Video Amy Pohler and Tina Fey make fun of a debate between Sarah Palin and Katie Couric. Some of the lines in this skit were taken directly from the actual conversation.
This is a parody of the first presidential candidate debate between John McCain and Barrak Obama. Although the McCain impression is not that accurate in this video, the Barrak impression raises some of his actual points from the real debate.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Community leader in ADVIS
A new learning opportunity indeed. Mr. Fisch at out school, has been given the huge privilege of being a community leader for the "ADVIS Cohort". Apparently this job entails taking care of some of the technical aspects of the site as well as pushing along conservations. The only major difference from what he has been doing at Arapahoe is that he won't be taking part in the face to face meetings (and he doesn't know many people within this new group). ADVIS also has a program called PLP, or Powerful Learning Practice. This new regimen integrates modern day technology with a "long-term, job-embedded professional development program". Integrating online tools, media, and new found communities into our learning and career development paths is a great idea. It allows students to make a fully informed choice about their futures. The web is a rapidly expanding pool of knowledge. Whats the point of having a pool if you don't go for a swim every once in a while?
Monday, September 15, 2008
Hybrid Electric Bikes?
In my article, Commuters beat the high price of gas with hybrid electric bikes, a man explains how by commuting with a hybrid electric bike he saves around 25 to 30 dollars a week. That's 100-120 dollars a month or 1200-1440 dollars a year. Another plus to this fantastic contraption is that to charge it only costs about 20 cents(in electricity costs). That is a diminutive carbon footprint compared to a car. There are many different models of hybrid bikes and the more powerful ones get between 20 and 80 miles per charge. The bikes don't run completely on electricity. You still have to petal, but the bike assists you, making a ride uphill a breeze. It looks like a normal bike, just with a little plastic covering the center. If everyone started using these bikes instead of cars than this country could stop putting millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Global warming is a monumental problem right now, and we as a country, and as a planet, have to do everything in our power to stop it.
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/videos/detail/john-mclinden-rides-his-electric-bike-work/
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/videos/detail/john-mclinden-rides-his-electric-bike-work/
Thursday, September 11, 2008
The Large Hadron Collider
The Large Hadron Collider, a machine designed to send protons at each other and gauge any reactions, had its first successful test firing yesterday. The machine cost $3.8 billion and consists of 17 miles of underground “tube” that the protons are fired down. It traverses the border of Switzerland and France and was built with collaboration from over 85 countries. The Collider is highly controversial and is considered by some, a threat to humanity. Even though top physicists like Stephan Hawking have said it is safe, there are still those who believe otherwise. I personally think that this is a huge scientific advancement. Supposedly the collider can make protons travel 99.999999% the speed of light(wikipedia). Sure it could probably be used as a weapon, but the possible scientific advancements such as the discovery of the Higs Boson, anti-matter, or extra dimensions far outweigh the risks. The people of earth need to start viewing the glass as half full not half empty. Look at the positives for a change. If you poke fun at things that scare you, they won’t scare you much longer.
Lab set to start world's largest particle collider –my article
Also, a rap about the function of the collider is attached to the bottom. Its already gotten over 2.5 million hits on youtube.com to date.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j50ZssEojtM
Lab set to start world's largest particle collider –my article
Also, a rap about the function of the collider is attached to the bottom. Its already gotten over 2.5 million hits on youtube.com to date.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j50ZssEojtM
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
